modifying shell stdout in real time

Ok so bear with me as I am not a professional, this is a proof of concept project to learn more about my shell, programming and just basic bash scripting.

So WHAT I WANT TO DO is: whenever anything is printed out in my terminal, be it the result of a command or an error message from the shell I want to apply some "filters" to what is being displayed so for example if I input "ls -a" in the terminal I would like to get the list of folders that the command returns but apply a TIME DELAY to the characters so that it seems like the list is being typed in real time.

More SPECIFICALLY I'd like for the script to take every alphanumerical character in STDOUT and spend a specific amount of time (say 100 milliseconds) iterating through random characters (these can be accessed randomly from a list) before finally stopping at the original value of the character.

WHAT I KNOW: not much, I am new to programming in general so also the bash language but I can read some code and browsing through I found this http://brettterpstra.com/2012/09/15/matrixish-a-bash-script-with-no-practical-application/ script that plays with tput. This shows me the visual effect I'd like to accomplish can be accomplished...now to make it happen orderly and individually for each character printed to STDOUT...that is what I can't figure out.

WHAT I THINK: in my mind I know I could take the STDOUT and pipe it to a file in which through any language (let's say python!) I can do all kinds of string manipulation and then return the output to STDOUT but I'd like for the characters to be manipulated in realtime so if for example the code was

Anyway, I've read a little about curses and ncurses and how you can create new windows with whatever specified parameters, I wonder if it'd be just a matter of creating a terminal with the specified parameters with the curses libraries and then making a link so that each new terminal instance opens my modified curses shell or if I can just do a bash shell script or if it'd be easiest to use something like python. I know all of the above can be options but I'm looking for the simplest, not necessarily most resource efficient answer.

Any help, comments, pointers etc is appreciated.

Best How To :

This does not answer you question fully, but it does print any input as if it was being type in real time:

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